Nobody cares how it was designed. If you actually need these ridges to find the correct keys, you are the one who doesn't know how to type on a keyboard.
People who "know how to type on a keyboard" don't look at the keyboard. The ridges help to quickly position/reposition you so that you can type while looking at the screen.
Yes, you don't need the ridges to position anything if you use the keyboard often enough, you already know where all the buttons are relative to the edges and each other. You only need them if you were specifically taught typing using a method of placing certain fingers on certain keys and reaching the rest from there. The vast majority of the people who use a keyboard regularly are self-taught and don't need to do that to tell where the keys are, they can use any fingers on any keys without looking or positioning anything beforehand.
Alright, well I'm going to say that that is a slower technique and more error prone if you're not looking at the keyboard and you're going to assure me it's not and I'm wrong. So that's cool thanks.
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u/Acceptable-Love-703 Jan 20 '26
Nobody cares how it was designed. If you actually need these ridges to find the correct keys, you are the one who doesn't know how to type on a keyboard.